Mumbai-born, Armenian and Anglo Indian by heritage, and Canadian by long residence, theater critic and poet Garebian (
Poetry Is Blood), in his ninth poetry collection, rejects any conventions of rural or pastoral poetry in favor of a hard-eyed look at “suburban Mississauga” (a Canadian city near Toronto), scrutinizing “real people from real life, often crystallized by gestures.” Garebian indeed often has the eye of a social critic, to the point of satire, though some readers will find his outlook verging on the stereotypical, even offensive; he is ready with terms like
spinster and
tranny, and the gay men who appear in his poems are always “cruising” in the bushes. Beyond the cynical jabs is a poet who reaches for transcendence—“I dream unity/ in what I know of textures,/ weathers, structures/ issuing from a matrix/ of everyday life”—and the alert Garebian is a reader not just of his neighborhood; poets and writers such as Virginia Woolf, Ocean Vuong, and Anne Carson get respectful nods or citations.
VERDICT The award-winning Garebian (including honors from the Scarborough Arts Council and the Ontario Poetry Society) offers a distinctive perspective on modern life that may well prove of interest to a number of readers.
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